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DISCLAIMER: The characters of Gabrielle, Xena, Alti and Ares belong to MCA/Universal and whoever else has a stake in them. I'll give them back when I'm done with them. Only slightly bruised! There's a bit of violence in this story, but that's okay, right?
TIMELINE: This quite short story is set in SEASON FIVE, during the episode Them Bones, Them Bones. As such, it contains spoilers. Like this one - Gabrielle getting her ass severely kicked in five seconds during her little trip into Alti's spirit realm bugged me a LOT. How did that make her feel? So this is my take on it … I sent her on a little side trip. Though if you haven't seen the episode, it might not make much sense! I hope you like it! Thanks to Ged and MaryD! Feedback would be greatly appreciated. temoram@yahoo.co.uk
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The Lady Knows When To Leave
by Temora
The air was devoid of all life. The spiritual realm Alti had created was the ultimate playground for one of her sort - a tortured, fragmented world where even the air itself bowed to her smothering will. Bare-boned trees, dry crackling grass. Flames as still as stone. A stream that did not flow. Birds that did not fly or breathe.
Gabrielle was one of those birds now, caught beyond measure. Hot shame filled her along with blinding pain. Oh gods. I've failed. I've failed you already, Xena. I never had a chance.
The bard kicked and swore as twisted, relentless hands crushed her windpipe. She closed her eyes, frantically willing herself to use the dagger clenched in her fist. Her muscles screamed in their trapped housings, useless, stilled, unable to obey. Red spots began to swim across the darkness, and Alti's hot, fetid breath laughed against her neck.
Somewhere in the back of her mind she could faintly hear the pleading voice of her friend….
You have the dagger, Gabrielle, use it!
A stunning blow to her head sent her crashing to the ground. Dimly, in the distance, she could see her other self fall. Alti's chilling, cracked laughter rang out behind her.
Xena, thought Gabrielle desperately, Xena, she's won, she beat me, bring me back. I can't, I can't…
She tried to scramble away from the shamaness, inch by agonising inch, clawing her way across the grass.
Alti began counting. "When I reach ten," she hissed, "you will be dead." She thrived on her evil art - even showmanship could not disguise her unfettered glee at the torture she was inflicting.
"ONE."
Gabrielle felt as if her body had burst into flames.
The blackness that hovered behind her eyes rushed forward with frightening speed and swallowed her whole.
****
When she opened her eyes, she was cold. The dark and weathered stone of the temple seemed to hem in the chill rather than drive it away. It was not a large place. Worship in these hard days had come down to a few poor offerings from intimidated mortals. Their scanty farms and threadbare children drove them to their knees in supplication in front of whatever god they thought would help. This temple was no exception.
Outside, it was night. Inside, it was midnight. Nothing could be heard but the hissing of flames, the soft, faraway call of a night-creature. The cornerstones were green, mossy. Years of leaks had trickled their way down the walls of this place, the soft water eroding the hard stone in a silent, unrelenting war. Torches sputtered in dulled brass sockets, emitting a haze that filled the air. It clouded the altar, tickled the nose.
Gabrielle wanted to sneeze, but didn't. She stood silently in the middle of the scarred floor and shivered in the gloom, slender arms wrapped tightly about herself. She was alone. Blood stained and furred Amazon robes were gone, her knife was gone. The pain was gone. She stood, dressed in her leathers, wondering why she was not dead.
Where is this place?
Green eyes mapped the outlines of the room, noted this week's
offerings - a rusted sword, a platter of wrinkled, dried olives,
an empty and cracked pewter canister. Her gaze came to rest on a
carved likeness which stretched across the entrance. Ares.
A flicker of a rueful smile touched her lips, but not her eyes.
Gabrielle had almost forgotten how to smile with her eyes. She
had lost touch with many things in the blood-filled days recently
behind her. What laughter was. The way love felt when it touched
your skin. How to tell stories. How to voice the feelings that
churned in her stomach, clenched at her heart. But there was one
thing she remembered with perfect, piercing clarity.
"Thank you for coming."
The quiet, deep voice came from nowhere and filled the temple,
but Gabrielle was not frightened. Nor was she surprised when the
dark form stepped out from behind the altar. Her arms dropped to
her sides, shoulders straightening unconsciously. Yes, there was
one thing she remembered. How much she hated this god.
"Thanks?" she replied bitterly. "You brought me
here. You didn't give me a choice."
"That's right," agreed the god of war. "I made the
choice. The choice to save your life."
"I don't need any favours," she spat. "Especially
from you."
"No? Watch."
The tall shape waved an arm. One wall of the temple rippled, the
stones turning upon themselves, distorting into smooth circles.
As the breach widened, Gabrielle saw herself in the stone. The
picture cleared. She was dragging herself across the yellowed
grass, face pale with agony, prone at Alti's feet.
Gabrielle's breath caught as Alti became visible, the cruel
triumph on her face almost too much to bear. Alti was laughing.
The shamaness did not have to hurt Gabrielle with her hands - in
the spirit realm it was her words that were killing the bard,
cruel words that forced the air from her lungs and stole the
strength from her limbs. Her words. Her reality. Her victory.
Alti's earlier declaration echoed in the temple…
I don't want to hurt the baby any more than you do. I need it to
be born…
Gabrielle stiffened. Xena's baby. The baby's safety was the
reason for her journey to the spirit realm. The reason she had
faced Alti and tried to kill her. The reason her other self now
lay gasping and dying on the cold earth of Alti's creation.
"Look familiar?" The god's voice was as soft as the
darkness surrounding him. "How exactly were you planning to
get out of this one, my little bard?"
"Don't call me that." The words were daggers, thin
and bright. "I'm not your anything."
The dark shape on the altar chuckled richly. Without seeming to
move, he was suddenly in front of her, a quiet rush of air
filling the space he had left. His voice dropped another register,
running along her skin like tendrils of smoke.
"I will call you whatever I see fit." A long finger
traced the outline of her arm. "Mortal."
Gabrielle did not move, did not blink. Once, this god had
frightened her. Once, she had trembled when he was near. Once,
she had mastered him, taken his powers away and restored them
again. Once, not so long ago, she had almost let herself be his.
Gabrielle didn't like the way her heart had picked up. She could
feel it, hear its erratic thunder, knew he must be able to hear
it too. In the wall, Alti's laughter splintered and broke like
ice on stone.
"Take your hand off me," Gabrielle said coolly,
striving for calm. "What is it you want?"
His hand dropped from her arm and waved lazily toward the wall
again. The image froze. Alti's head was thrown back, teeth
glistening, hands clenched. Gabrielle's visage was stilled too,
choking and tortured. Without realising she had been holding her
breath, Gabrielle let it out. She had a little time, then.
"You are no longer afraid of me, are you Gabrielle?"
Ares asked smoothly.
She raised her head. "No. Why should I be afraid of a waning
god?" She indicated the run-down temple. "Look at this
place. No-one wants the kind of protection you offer. You're
finished and you don't even know it. There's nothing to be afraid
of any more."
She subsided, satisfied with the words she had chosen, feeling
her heart slow and calm again. If her words had offended the god,
his face betrayed nothing.
"I've kept an eye on you," he said calmly. "Both
eyes, in fact. I've been watching you for months now. You knew
that."
"Yes."
"You know when I'm there." It was not a question.
"Yes. It's like snakes crawling over my skin. Why do you
watch me?"
Dark eyes bored into hers. "Why do you think?"
She did not look away. "You want me to be your Chosen."
"Gabrielle," the god chuckled richly, 'you already are
my Chosen. That's why I brought you here. I can offer you life."
"I already have life," she mimicked, stone-faced.
The wall of the temple rippled once more, and for an instant,
just a blink of an eye, Gabrielle began to die again.
"FIVE!" Alti's cackle.
The god's voice was a whisper. "Not for much longer."
****
"Gabrielle, do you hear me? I want you back here right now!
Gabrielle, you can do no more good!"
Xena was frantic. Gabrielle was slipping away before her eyes, a
thin trickle of blood sliding down her neck. She cradled her
partner's empty body in her arms, begging her to wake. There was
no response.
****
"What makes you think you'll survive?"
Gabrielle drew herself up. "Xena will bring me back."
"Will she?" asked Ares, an eyebrow raising. "How
do you know?"
"Because she loves me," answered the blonde,
steadfastly. "She promised she wouldn't let go of me, and
she won't."
"Gabrielle." Her name silked from the god's lips.
"When … and if … that happens, what will you tell
her?"
Green eyes dragged themselves away from brown and dropped to the
floor. Her voice was husky.
"I'll … I'll tell her that…."
"That you failed?" A torch popped loudly, and Gabrielle
swallowed.
"Yes," she replied firmly, her heart breaking, the
shame flooding her again. "I'll tell her I failed."
"Will you tell her Alti wants to steal the baby's soul, and
that because of you, she is still alive to do so?"
"Yes."
The god was silent for a moment. He flickered in the fire light,
vanishing and reappearing behind her. Gabrielle forced herself to
remain still, though she couldn't stop her skin from goose-pimpling.
His voice purred into her ear. "What if you didn't have
to? What if, instead of another stunning failure from the Bard of
Potedaeia, you could return to her victorious?"
At his words, Gabrielle felt a stab in her stomach. She shut her
eyes. Damn him! Of course he could read her thoughts. Of course
he had been doing so. He had unerringly and mercilessly hit her
right where it hurt.
The god continued, circling her with infinite slowness, every
word an arrow to her heart. "Aren't you tired of failing,
Gabrielle? Aren't you tired of being second best? How many times
has Xena had to pull you out of a mess of your own making?"
"Shut up, Ares." Gabrielle's breath had quickened.
"You haven't even been in the spirit world for five minutes,
and Alti's beaten you already. Doesn't that shame you? What will
Xena think of you?"
"Ares, damn you!' she shouted. Her eyes were flashing cold
fire; fire and something else. Pain. "I did my best! Alti is
just too strong for me! Not every battle can be won first round."
Ares steepled his fingers and his head tilted just a fraction.
"Is that the excuse you'll give Xena?" he inquired,
smiling. "She was … just too strong for you?"
An explosive noise escaped Gabrielle. I will not let him hurt me,
I will not let him hurt me. "When are you going to get tired
of this?"
"I can offer you a victory. You can defeat Alti. You can
kill her forever and return to Xena and the baby unharmed."
"Oh yeah?" snapped Gabrielle. "At what cost?"
Ares smiled then, and in his smile was love and darkness. "Not
cost, Gabrielle. Reward. A seat at my side. You can be everything
you have ever wanted to be, including a hero. To her."
Gabrielle sighed. Same old, same old. "No deal. Ares, are
you ever going to realise that I can't be won this way?"
"What way is that, my Gabrielle? The way of truth? You're
ashamed of yourself. Of your failure. It is true, isn't it? Your
heart is breaking even now."
"Of course I'm ashamed!" she burst out, the tears
beginning to fall. "Yes, I've failed her again, and that
hurts me. But I would never run away from facing her!"
"Why not?"
"Because, because…" Because it's only me that has to
live with the guilt.
"Because it's happened so many times before that she's used
to it?" the god taunted, leering. "Little Gabrielle.
All grown up now? New body, new weapons, but still the same
scared little girl inside. You think you're her equal? You think
you can possibly give Xena what she needs?"
"Because- " Because saving her is saving myself.
"You've failed her! Alti is still alive and stronger than
ever. How can you face her knowing that you're this weak?"
"Because she loves me for trying, you
bastard!" The god stepped backwards slightly as the words
ripped furiously from Gabrielle's mouth.
There was a silence, and during the silence, for the first time
Gabrielle accepted the truth of her own words. Win or lose, Xena
loved her for trying.
She had no reason to feel guilty. Ares had been using the wrong
weapon. It was not what Xena would think of her that left her
choked and saddened. It was what Gabrielle thought of herself.
And those demons, the invisible demons, she could deal with. The
crushing sense of shame lessened, and Gabrielle felt her heart
grow lighter.
She raised a hand and pushed the god further away, the tears
spilling over her cheeks. "You'll never understand that,
will you? For you it's always about winning."
She stepped away from him and fixed her eyes on her own tortured
image in the wall. "Send me back."
"You'll die, Gabrielle. If I send you back without my help,
you'll die. I can promise you that."
"No … I … won't," she insisted. "Xena
will bring me home."
"You trust her that much?" The god's eyes were darker
than night itself. "Enough to risk your existence?"
Gabrielle turned to look at Ares. When he saw her eyes, he knew
he had lost her forever. He felt a stab in his heart.
"Every day of my existence I owe to her. I would give my
life a thousand times if I had to, for her, or for her child."
Her arms crossed her body, an unspoken gesture of determination.
"And even if I do go back to Alti's world and I die, I'd
still make this choice again. Death is better than any victory on
your terms."
"Gabrielle … if Xena fails…." Ares was
hurting now, the unfamiliar pain in his chest threatening to
drown him.
"Then I'll still love her for trying," answered
Gabrielle, softly. "Even from the Elysian Fields. Now, send
me back."
Ares looked at her for a long moment. Then he smiled. And in his
smile was pain, and loss. "As you wish. Goodbye, Gabrielle."
The blackness swallowed her again. Xena, I'm sorry I failed you,
but I tried. Please bring me home.
****
"TEN!" gloated Alti, and Gabrielle's heart exploded in
her chest. Her breathing cut short. The blood drained from her
face. She rolled onto her back. And then she died, and there was
nothing at all.
****
This time, when she woke, she wasn't cold. There was warmth, and
there was pain, but it was bearable. There was a friend cradling
her in loving arms, and tears shed over her. And there was the
knowledge she had tried.
--END--
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